Kurzfassung der Vorträge und Poster Eline N. van Asperen People, prey and predators: how faunal dynamics inform our models of hominin dispersal The climate and largely forested environment of the Last Interglacial (marine isotope stage 5e) are thought to have been similar over large stretches of north-west and central Europe. Though the British Isles are climatically comparable to the European mainland at this time, certain key species, notably hominins, horses and forest rhino, are missing from Last Interglacial faunas of the British Isles. Various explanations have been offered for the enigmatic absence of evidence for hominin occupation of the British Isles during this period, including taphonomic factors, sea level rise, population dynamics and adaptive limitations which prevented hominins from surviving in densely forested environments. The detailed faunal and environmental records for the Last Interglacial allow for an investigation of the impact of large mammal community composition and dynamics on the role of hominins in the faunal com- munity. Using GIS approaches and statistical methods, the influence of environmental variables and the location of refugia on hominin dispersal and distribution are explored. The carnivorous Last Interglacial hominin diet brought the hominins in direct competition with large carnivores that focus on similar-sized prey. The complex relationships between hominins, their prey and their carnivore competitors are examined, using ecological theories of food webs and species interactions. Approaching hominins as an integral part of the large mammal community thus opens new avenues of investigating hominin behaviour. Acknowledgements: This research is supported by the European Commission under the Marie Curie Actions of the Seventh Framework Programme (PERG07-GA-2010-268242). ✉ Research Centre in Evolutionary Anthropology and Palaeoecology, School of Natural Sciences and Psychology, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, United Kingdom / Hull York Medical School, University of York, York YO10 5DD, United Kingdom; [email protected] Jonathan Baines Vegetation and subsistence during the Upper and Epi-Palaeolithic in the Iranian Zagros region Whilst settlement patterns altered by the Palaeolithic’s end, analyses of the Ghar e Boof cave (36 000– 30 000 BP) and Chogha Golan tell (12 000 BP) botanic assemblages do not evince a changed vegetation. The variety in taxa and respective conditions inhabited remained similar, considering the common topogra- phy of the two sites, and indicate a moister upland steppe environment. Though later era’s stone tool technology was no original development, rather a refining of earlier practices set in the Upper Palaeolithic, the breadth of seed and fruit foraging widened. Large pulse and pistachio collection for instance continued, with the addition of cereal grains harvested from wild stands. The increased diversification in grasses may reflect the incipiency of foraging for such food and corroborates in suggesting pre-cultivation use of these plants. The lentil and pea remains however, could represent the onset of growing food nearby the settlement, a prac- tice developed out of the custom of foraging them from wild, but not feasible when still living fully nomadic. Sedentariness thus did not lead to new subsistence, rather to increasing of particular plant food output that had a longstanding tradition, for example legume collection, by establishing local denser growths. Guido Bataille Innovations and processes of economical adaptation during the Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition in Eastern Europe – the examples of Crimea and the Middle-Don Region The presentation will present the results of a PHD thesis at the University of Cologne. The Crimean Pensinsula and the Kostenki region represent two complementary settings for studying the Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition. Crimea shows a long survival of Middle Palaeolithic industries until 13 ~33/32.000 cal. BP. Furthermore, Crimea exhibits evidence for the coexistence of late Middle Palaeolithic industries associated with fossil remains of Neanderthals (Crimean Micoquian) and Early Upper Palaeo- lithic remains attested by interstratifications at Buran-Kaya III and possible Middle Palaeolithic palimpsests within the Aurignacian sequence of Siuren 1. In contrast to that, the Kostenki region (Mid-Don region) has long been seen as uninhabited by Middle Palaeolithic groups during OIS 3 and first colonized by Upper Palaeolithic groups, according to radiocarbon dates prior to 40.000 cal. BP. The Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition in Eastern Europe between the Crimean Peninsula in the South and the Central Russian Plain in the North is marked by the occurrence of two different adaptive systems. The first one is based on the production of bladelets, blades and bone points and the second by the manu- facture of symmetrical bifacial foliates in a bi-convex manner. These adaptive systems comprise different techno-complexes: the first one includes the Aurignacian and the initial Upper Palaeolithic industries of Kostenki 14 (layers IVa till IVb) and Kostenki 17 (layer II/ ”Spitsynskaya”), and the second contains assem- blages of the Streletskaya industry and the related transitional assemblages of Kostenki 12, layer III (Mid- Don) and Buran-Kaya III, layer C (Crimea). According to absolute data and stratigraphic markers the blade- let and blade based initial Upper Palaeolithic assemblages of Kostenki 14/IVb1-2 and Kostenki 17/II (Mid-Don) occur earlier than the assemblages based on the production of foliates and bifacial tools, such as Kostenki 12/III (Mid-Don) and Buran-Kaya III/C (Crimea). The latter assemblages show elements which might be linked to a Micoquian tradition, while the former are more or less void of any Middle Palaeolithic elements. Due to this observation, the occurrence of foliate assemblages are interpreted as a reaction of regional Middle Palaeolithic groups to incoming early Upper Palaeolithic groups and as an in situ transforma- tion of the material culture in the course of economic adaptations. All those adaptive innovations, centred in the today Russian Plain, are accompanied by the latest Middle Palaeolithic occurrences in Crimea. Thus, a complex scenario for the Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transfor- mation has to be considered, including dietary competition, processes of cultural transformation and the replacement of Middle Palaeolithic groups by occurring Early Upper Palaeolithic groups. These processes lead to the final abandonment of the Middle Palaeolithic mode of life, and its replacement by Upper Palaeolithic economical systems. ✉ University of Cologne, Institute of Prehistoric Archaeology Lorenzo Betti (Trento), Paolo Boscato (Siena), Monica Gala (Roma), Antonio Tagliacozzo (Roma), Ursula Wierer (Bozen- Siena) Investigating seasonality. Evidences from the Mesolithic site Galgenbühel/Dos de la Forca (South Tyrol, Italy) Untersuchungen zur jahreszeitlichen Nutzung der mesolithischen Fundstelle Galgenbühel/Dos de la Forca (Südtirol, Italien) Archaeological sites with rich faunal assemblages allow various levels of analysis to reconstruct past life- styles. Studies about the season at death of the animals, finalized to determine the season of human site frequentation, are particularly intriguing among hunter-gatherer societies. Such data contribute to the under- standing of their relationship with the territory, their mobility and settlement pattern. An interdisciplinary approach regarding seasonality is actually being done for the Mesolithic site Galgen- bühel/Dos de la Forca located in valley bottom of the Etsch/Adige in South Tyrol (Italy). The site was repeatedly frequented by Sauveterrian hunter-gatherer-fisher groups from the mid-9th to the mid-8th mil- lennium BC cal., by people who followed mainly a wetland economy. The most consistent seasonality data originate in fact from the very numerous fish remains, composed by bones of the Pike and of Cyprinids. A laborious selection of sufficiently well preserved vertebrae and scales preceded the reading of their incre- mental growth structures. The so far collected data indicate fishing between spring and autumn. These information is confirmed by the rare evidences from mammal bones, especially from young wild boar. Sea- sonal data coming from the bird-bone assemblage are discussed as well. Besides presenting the results of the different analyses, the authors discuss some methodological issues regarding the seasonality study. The work is part of a wider research project headed by the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology, carried out in cooperation with the Archaeological Heritage Office. The project is financed by the Higher Educa- tion Support, University and Research Office of the Autonomous Province of Bolzano. 14 Uwe Beye (Magdeburg), Ralf J. Prilloff (Wolmirstedt), Thomas Weber (Halle/Saale) Neandertaler an der Mittelelbe? Mittelpaläolithische Funde aus Barleben, Landkreis Börde, und Gübs, Landkreis Jerichower Land (Sachsen-Anhalt) Vor zwei Jahren wurde auf der Jahrestagung der Hugo-Obermaier-Gesellschaft über die Entdeckung eines zuvor unbekannten Oberflächenfundplatzes geschlagener Steinartefakte bei Vahldorf nordwestlich von Magdeburg berichtet (Beye & Weber 2011). Diese Funde kommen beim Pflügen auf der fast tischebenen Ackerfläche zutage. Eine Einmessung von Stücken, deren genauer Fundpunkt feststellbar war, ergab eine Fundverbreitung, die das Auftreten wohl weichseleiszeitlicher Lössderivate auf der hier durch
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